Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Faculty Research and Scholarship Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology 2004 The Mycenaean Feast: An Introduction James C. Wright Bryn Mawr College, [email protected] Let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/arch_pubs Part of the Classical Archaeology and Art History Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Custom Citation Wright, James C. 2004. The Mycenaean Feast: An Introduction. Hesperia 73:121-132. This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/arch_pubs/91 For more information, please contact [email protected]. HESPERIA Pages 73 (2004) 121-132 1. I wishto thankPaulHalsteadand JackDavisforreadinga draftof this introduction, providingusefulreferences,andmakingvaluablesuggestions. 2. Abstractsof the papersdelivered aspartof "TheMycenaean Feast: An Archaeological at the Colloquium" AIA Annual Meeting in Philadelphia in 2002 arepublishedin AJA 106 (2002), pp. 272-273. TH AN E MYCENAEANFEAST INTRODUCTION In 2001, I participated in a conference on the culture and cuisine of the prehistoricAegean, sponsoredby the Department of Prehistoryand Archaeology at the University at Sheffield.i Many of the papers focused in one way or another on feasting, and I realized that the archaeologicalremains of feasting were more abundant than I had suspected. Especially interesting was the amount of evidence from differentsourcesthat elucidatedfeasting in Mycenaean society. I decided that it would be worthwhile to organize a conference on that subject, and, initially collaboratingwith Sharon Stocker,proposed a session entitled "The Mycenaean Feast"for the 103rd Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA), to be held in Philadelphia in January2002. We wished to demonstrate that the archaeological record was sufficiently rich to allow the identification and characterizationof the practice of feasting in Mycenaean times. We therefore invited colleagues to contribute papers approaching this issue from a number of perspectives, using several varieties of evidence: iconographic, artifactual,textual, faunal, and contextual (actual deposits).2 The paperspresented in Philadelphia included one by Jack Davis and Stocker on the evidence from the Palace of Nestor at Pylos; another on a deposit from Tsoungiza by Mary Dabney, Paul Halstead, and PatrickThomas; one by Lisa Bendall on the textual and archaeologicalevidence from Pylos; and my own investigation of the problem of identifying feasting from tomb assemblages,as depicted on frescoes, and from other sources.If these papers succeeded in characterizinga distinctive "Mycenaean"practice, that practice could be further defined by contrasting it with those from cultures in contact with the Mycenaeans. Thus, we also invited Elisabetta Borgna to talk about Minoan feasting, with special referenceto the evidence from Phaistos, and Louise Steel to discuss feasting in Late Bronze Age Cyprus. Both were charged to consider how practices in their areaswere affected by Mycenaean customs of feasting, and to what extent local practices continued or even resisted the introduction of new practices. Robin Higg served as the respondent and compared and contrasted the Late Bronze Age evidence with later Greek practices of feasting and sacrifice. Afterward, the participants agreed that it would be worthwhile to rework our papers and present them for publication, and Tracey Cullen suggested we consider publishing them as a special issue of Hesperia. 122 JAMES C. WRIGHT In the course of pulling this volume together, changes were made. Bendall'spaper will appearin the publication of the Sheffield Conference and therefore is not included here.3I invited Thomas Palaima to contribute a paper that treated the Linear B evidence, an exceptionally rich and fundamental source of information. A study of feasting in the Homeric epics and during the Iron Age was needed to round out the subject, and Susan Sherratt accepted the challenge. Together, the authors survey the different kinds of evidence for feasting during the Mycenaean era, set this evidence in the context of feasting practices among interdependent cultures, and consider the difficult issue of a tradition and its transformation as the "civilization"that practiced it becomes only a practice of memory. Thematic conferences are common in the discipline of Aegean preand protohistory, and have dealt with subjects such as invasions and mideath and burialcustoms,6 the state,7 grations,4the "Minoanthalassocracy,"5 and economy and politicsll-to name only warfare,8religion,9urbanism,"' few. Fewer have been a solely concerned with the Mycenaeans,12 and fewer yet have chosen a theme that is a specific social practice. The reason for this may be that archaeologists are not comfortable exploring social practices, which are difficult to document through the material record. For example, if it is difficult for archaeologists to reconstruct religion, even in the abstract, it is more difficult, if not altogether questionable, to try to understand highly social practices such as marriage,kinship, and feasting. That we make the effort to do so today representsthe extent to which we have made sufficient advancesin our examination of evidence. Addressing these issues has required overcoming skepticism about the limits of archaeological inquiry,13and the development of methods of analysis that move beyond traditional concerns with typology, chronology, and distribution. This renewed interest in recovering social aspects of ancient societies is functional in that it reflects a desire to know how and for what purpose objects were created and employed by humans; it also, however, grows out of our increasing recognition that the issues of production and consumption that have interested us for decades are products of the social agency of individuals and of corporate bodies.14 Skeptics of archaeology'sability to explain past events base their concern on the unbridgeable maw that separates the material past from the present.The conceptual gap lies between the material remains of the past and the intentions and actions of humans who created them, and it is argued that it can be bridged through the use of ethnographic and ethnoarchaeological analogy.This argument, however, rests on the assumption that humans acted in the past in much the same manner in which they do today.If archaeologyis ever to contribute to our understandingof the past, it is necessarythat we employ analogy.In this sense, archaeology,like other interpretivedisciplines of the humanities, is a "theoreticallyinformed practice."5 Ethnography is fundamental to such an archaeology,but, as Comaroff and Comaroff claim, it must be an ethnography that bears the imprint of contemporary debates, of assumptions and claims profoundly questioned, of the impossibility of ironic detachment.... [It] must also assert a faith that the human world, 3. Bendall,forthcoming.The papers from this conferencewill appearin HalsteadandBarrett,forthcoming. 4. CrosslandandBirchall1974. 5. Higg andMarinatos1984. 6. Laffineur1987;Higg and Nordquist1990;Branigan1998. 7. LaffineurandNiemeier1995. 8. Laffineur1999a. 9. Higg andNordquist1990; LaffineurandHdigg2001. 10.Branigan2001. 11.VoutsakiandKillen2001. andPalaima1984; 12. Shelmerdine VoutsakiandKillen2001. 13. Leach1977;Patrik1985; ShanksandTilley1987;Hodder1991. 14. Giddens1984. 15. ComaroffandComaroff1992, p. x. THE MYCENAEAN FEAST: AN INTRODUCTION 123 post-anything and -everything, remains the product of discernible social and culturalprocesses:processes partially indeterminate yet, in some measure, systematicallydetermined; ambiguous and polyvalent, yet never utterly incoherent or meaningless; open to multiple constructions and contest, yet never entirely free of order--or the reality of power and constraint.16 16. Comaroffand Comaroff 1992, p. xi. 17. Comaroffand Comaroff1992, p. xi. 18. Dietler and Hayden 2001. 19. Orme 1981, p. 284. 20. Binford 1981; Speth 1983; O'Connor 1998. I thank Paul Halstead for supplyingthese references. 21. Tzedakisand Martlew 1999. 22. Pauketatet al. 2002, pp. 261263. 23. Pauketatet al. 2002, pp. 265266. 24. Hamilakisand Konsolaki2004, 142. p. 25. Pauketatet al. 2002, pp. 268269; Pappaet al., forthcoming. 26. Tzedakisand Martlew 1999; McGovern et al. 1999; McGovern 2003. The authors go on to argue that ethnography"is indispensable to the production of knowledge about all manner of social phenomena. Indeed ... no humanist account of the past or present can (or does) go very far without the kind of understanding that the ethnographic gaze presupposes."" In the study of feasting, the fundamental value of ethnography is evident in a recent volume edited by Michael Dietler and Brian Hayden on the archaeology and ethnographyof feasting;'8ethnographic and archaeological accounts from around the globe provide rich and varied examples on which to draw.The articles demonstrate the extent to which some human activities have a universalquality and they also counter simplistic explanations by broadening the choices of probable interpretations, sometimes even offering contradictory ones.19 In studying the practice of feasting, archaeologists devise and utilize methods of analysis that lead to a direct assessment of specific human activities.This is most apparentin faunal analysis, in which the comparative, ethnoarchaeological study of butchering now permits declarativeassessments of the purposes of different kinds of butchering marksand bone treatment and disposal.20 Increasingly,the analysis of residues in vessels allows us to determine, with varying degrees of precision, the contents of vessels and the ways in which vessels were used in food production.21 Similarly, studies of deposits can lead to precise histories of deposition, for example through attention to palaeoentomological evidence, the remains of which can indicate the presence of organicwaste in which insects thrived during the spring and summer months.22 It is also possible to reconstruct from palaeobotanical and zoological remains the very wide range of foodstuffs consumed at feasts. In feasting deposits at Cahokia in southern Illinois, for example, Pauketat and his colleagues found evidence of corn, bottle gourd, squash, sunflower,sumpweed, chenopod, maygrass, erect knotweed, four varieties of nuts, grape, and many fruits (persimmon, strawberry,plum, bramble,elderberry,nightshade, blackhaw,mulberry,sunflower), along with greens and small grains (amaranth,purslane,panicoid grasses, carpetweed, and spurges).23At the Mycenaean sanctuary at Ayios Konstantinos, Hamilakis and Konsolaki identified sheep, goat, cattle, pig, red deer, mouse/rat, rock dove, bird, and fish.24 Comparative study of ceramic vessel forms and their quantities in deposits elucidates similarities and differences between feasting deposits and domestic ones, as demonstrated by Pauketat et al. in their analysis of vessels from Cahokia and by Pappa and colleagues in a study of the drinking cups from Makriyalos in Macedonia.25As noted, chemical analysis of contents also promises identification of specific foodstuffs preparedin vessels.26 A particularlyvaluable source of information is textual, as observed by Schmandt-Besserat in her review of feasting in the ancient Near East, 124 JAMES C. WRIGHT and as is well known from the rich documentation of the deipnon and symposionin ancient Greece.27 For the study of Mycenaean feasting, the Linear B texts from Thebes, Pylos, and Knossos have proven especially important.These examples demonstrate the arrayof information available to archaeologists investigating this fundamental human social practice. It is perhaps the strength of the textual evidence for the Mycenaean feast that gives the greatest credibility to the collection of papers in this volume. These papers provide a material substance to the bureaucratic shorthand of the texts. The Linear B documents are notations of palace scribes, found in their briefest form on sealings that accompanied groups of texts or objects,28 and more fully on the tablets collected in archives.29 These records do not contain specific references to "feasts"but rather indicate them indirectly.30Thus, Killen, following on the work of Piteros, Olivier, and Melena, showed how the clay sealings fromThebes that documented the provisioning of animals for sacrifice or slaughter were related to similardocuments from Knossos and Pylos.31Taken together,the records provide powerful evidence for large-scale feasts. In a further study of this subject, Killen associated the well-known Ta series tablets from Pylos with the auditing of feasting equipment in the palace.32These tablets list bronze vessels that had been stored, record their condition, and list other equipment, including tables, chairs, and stools, different kinds of ceramic serving vessels, and axes and knives. Although the interpretationrelies on circumstantialassociations,it representsa powerful argument for feasting and its importance in activities at the palace, as Palaima'sarticle in this volume demonstrates.The provisioning and preparation for feasts, especially large-scale events sponsored by the palace, had a major impact on many sectors of the economy and society. When one considers the many types of vessels, implements, furnishings, and foodstuffs employed in a feast, and the large number of animals involved,33the magnitude of Mycenaean feasting becomes apparent.Killen suggests this by stating that the importance of the feast was for "holding together the fabric of the society"and he goes on to claim that "the provision of feasts was felt to be one of the duties of the monarch: part of what he gave in reciprocity,as it were, for the services and taxes which the subjects provided him with; and feasts also clearly played an important role in ensuring the continuing good-will of important state officials and of the subordinate nobility."34We may observe in passing that the faunal deposit of a feast at Neolithic Makriyalos may have been so large as to require the slaughter of all the cattle, pigs, and sheep/goats of the entire region,35and Halstead and Isaakidou (see also Stocker and Davis, this volume) estimate 27. Schmandt-Bessarat2001, pp. 397-399. For deipnonand symposion, see Murray1990, p. 6; Lissarrague 1990. 28. Piteros, Olivier,and Melena 1990; for generaldiscussionof seals and sealings,see the contributionsin Palaima1990 and Palaima1984, 1987, 1988, 1996, 2000a, b. 29. For a generalintroductionto the tablets,see Chadwick 1987, esp. pp. 33-43; also Chadwick 1958; Olivier 1967; Ventrisand Chadwick 1973; Palaima1988; Bennet 2001, pp. 27-33. 30. Comparethe discussionof the Homeric term 8cx; in Sherratt's contributionto this volume. 31. Piteros,Olivier,andMelena 1990,pp.171-184.Killen1994, pp.71-76;see alsoKillen1992. 32. Killen1998. 33. Isaakidouet al.2002;Stocker andDavis,thisvolume. 34. Killen1994,p. 70. 35. Pappaet al.,forthcoming. THE 36. HalsteadandIsaakidou, forthcoming; see also Isaakidouet al. 2002. 37. Clarke2001, p. 153. MYCENAEAN FEAST: AN INTRODUCTION 125 that the total number of persons fed at a feast at Pylos was "enough,by the rules of thumb of modern British receptions, to feed several thousand guests."36These calculations help us appreciatethe widespread impact of feasting on the economy of the Mycenaean palaces, and they also make clear how many areasof scribalactivity were affected by feasting. In this regard Palaima'scontribution to this volume marks a significant advance on previous scholarship. He examines the tablets for evidence of the administrativestructureof feasting by focusing on the role of individuals, notably the "collectors,"in the administration of feasting; by indicating the largercontext of feasting within the practice of sacrificeand worship at sanctuaries;and by considering the geographical and political implications posed by the tablets. From his study we learn that feasting was administered in similar fashion by the palaces at Knossos, Pylos, and Thebes; it was part of a highly centralized palace bureaucracythat had firm control of territories and provincial localities up to 100 km distant; and that state feasting was sponsored not only at the major palaces, but also at secondary centers or localities within them. Monitoring of feasting was also important within the hierarchies of bureaucraticattention. As Palaima notes, feasting was an activity in which the wanax was centrally involved. Furthermore, in his discussion of the Ta series from Pylos, he observes that the inventorying of festal equipment fell under the purview of one of the most important scribes. On the assumption that different sets of texts are closely interrelated, he is able to look at the records of thrones and stools for details of the seating arrangementof high officials. This textual information supports the interpretationof evidence from Tsoungiza by Dabney, Halstead, and Thomas in this volume. They argue that a feast held at Tsoungiza, a minor settlement in the territoryof Mycenae, was connected with the palace or its representatives.Equally, the archaeological evidence from the Palace of Nestor presented here by Stocker and Davis confirms Palaima'stextual exegesis. The authors show that the locations of feasting deposits around the palace, especially in the Archives Complex, relate to large-scale feasts sponsored by the state and probably also to the seating of highly ranked individuals. If the centrality of the feast among the social practices of the Mycenaeans is evident, then we should inquire about the impact of feasting on the structure and organization of the society. The texts focus on feasting that was politically and economically significant enough to be recorded. Feasting, however, surely operated at levels and in areas outside the purview of the palaces. In this regard, the ethnographic study of feasting is particularlyhelpful. We learn that feasts occur throughout the year.They are performed by every social group-from the family to an entire society-by kin, moiety and sodality, and individuals acting through all kinds of personae.The occasionsinclude any event from birth to death that people choose to celebrate.Clarke'slist of occasions for Akha feasts is illustrative: to honor ancestors, mark the naming of a newborn, cure sickness, honor butchers, for workmen as a penalty, for purification, to mark a gate rebuilding, honor the Lords of the Earth, mark the harvest, announce the new year,on occasion of an annual drama,for a wedding, for a new house, to mark menopause, and on occasion of a funeral.37 It is little wonder, in 126 JAMES C. WRIGHT consequence, that the reasons proposed for feasting have been equallyvaried, with different observers emphasizing different aspects of the feast.38 Some have seen feasts as mechanisms for redistribution, others as means for demonstrating heritable holdings and status, while many claim that they demonstrate and amplify prestige. It is evident that feasts were not merely performed for practical and social benefit, but also for theological and liturgical reasons-in order,for example, to maintain the cosmic order.The result, however, as Hayden emphasizes, is practical,39and his list of nine benefits of feasting is a powerful statement about the degree to which this social practice permeates the many dimensions of human activities.40 According to Hayden, feasts 1. mobilize labor; 2. create cooperative relationships within groups or, conversely, exclude other groups; 3. create cooperative alliances between social groups (including political support between households); 4. invest surpluses and generate profits; 5. attract desirable mates, labor, allies, or wealth exchanges by advertising the success of the group; 6. create political power (control over resources and labor) through the creation of a network of reciprocaldebts; 7. extract surplus produce from the general populace for elite use; 8. solicit favors;and 9. compensate for transgressions. We are not yet in the position of being able to identify which of the many possible reasons for feasting are those most relevant to Mycenaean society. Killen has argued that, among tablets from Pylos, Ta 711 refers to preparations for a feast upon the appointment of a new magistrate, and Un 138 "recordsthe provisions for a banquet held 'on the initiation of the Palaima king' (mu-jo-me-noe-pi wa-na-ka-te, /muiomenoiepi wanaktei/)."41 discusses other tablets that link feasting with the wanax, which is to be expected among the records of the palace, but surely other motivations for feasting occurred, both within the palace and among communities outside it. In their study of the deposit from the rural settlement at Tsoungiza, Dabney, Halstead, and Thomas suggest that it was from a feast that was a community celebration marking a relationship between the community and the palace, but there is no strong evidence to indicate more precisely the reasonfor this feast. I had earlierproposed that the deposit atTsoungiza represented a rural shrine,42but the faunal remains and analysis of the ceramics now strongly suggest a feast with a religious component, which raises a question about the identification of religious centers outside the palaces.43Evidence from the recently excavated shrine complex at Ayios Konstantinos on Methana may give reason to investigate whether feasts were regularlyheld at religious centers,44but we cannot yet be more precise about the nature of these centers. Nonetheless, this probability should cause excavatorsand researchersto look again at the remains from identified sanctuarysites for any evidence of feasting that might have been over- 38. Hayden 2001, pp. 28-35; Perodie2001, pp. 187-188. 39. Hayden 2001, pp. 28-35. 40. Hayden 2001, pp. 29-30. 41. Killen 1998, p. 422; see also Piteros, Olivier,and Melena 1990, pp. 171-184; and Killen 1994. 42. Wright 1994, pp. 69-70. 43. Wright 1994, pp. 63-72. 44. Hamilakis and Konsolaki2004. THE 45. Acheson1999;Deger-Jalkotzy 1999;DavisandBennet1999. 46. Hiller 1999; Kontorli-Papadopoulou 1999; Laffineur1999b. MYCENAEAN FEAST: AN INTRODUCTION I27 looked. Places where this would be especially worthwhile are Mycenae, Tiryns, Asine, Amyklai, Epidauros, Delphi, Aigina, and Ayia Triada at Ayios Vassilios. It remainsdifficult to identify the reasonsfor feasting, since, as Clarke's list above (p. 125) indicates, in most instances they are not specific to locales and many of his occasions that might take place in a domestic setting would be equally appropriateat a sanctuary.Sanctuaries are often the locales of special feasts, especially when the deity of the sanctuary is celebrated at a specific time of the year,such as the onset of the new year,the harvest, or some other natural phenomenon marked by celebration.The Linear B texts that record activities, dedications, offerings, and landholdings at shrines and to particulardeities are therefore candidates for thinking about ways to specify the occasions of feasting. Homer is of great value in this matter, as the often-cited festival to Poseidon in book III of the Odysseyillustrates. The epics also provide many specific occasions for feasting. As Sherratt observes in her contribution to this volume, feasting and fighting are the two most frequent activities described in the Iliad and the Odyssey.In her analysis we are confronted with the longstanding problem of whether we can use the epics to understand the Mycenaeans, and if so, how. The crux of this issue rests on whether or not there are sufficient similarities in the structuresof Mycenaean and Homeric society to warrant comparison. Comparative study of feasting practice may be a particularly fruitful way of revealing societal structure. In both Mycenaean and Homeric society, feasting is predominantly a male activity in a warrior society. The warrior tradition was established during the Middle Bronze Age and was accentuated during the Early Mycenaean period (Middle Helladic III-Late Helladic II) as aggrandizing elites competed with each other and between different localities.45The symbolism employed by these groups bespeaks their roles as hunters and warriorsand is reflected in the iconography shared among the peer-polity palace centers on the mainland and the islands.46 Feasting was a central practice in the process of sociopolitical evolution. As Sherratt'scomparative examination of Mycenaean and Homeric feasting shows, many of the types of animals sacrificed and eaten, and the practices of cooking and types of equipment employed, are similar, but there remain significant differences, and she concludes that the feasts in Homer's epics primarily describe practices of the Early Iron Age. As she indicates, Homeric feasts are also celebrated on many different occasions, by different social groups, and with different levels of inclusion. In the studies presented here, there is little evidence to suggest such variety,nor can we say much about the different occasions for feasting. Instead, much of what we present is the residue of elite feasting. Nonetheless, progress has been made. Stocker and Davis suggest that at the Palace of Nestor at least two levels of feasting took place, one public and another private and also associated with important ritual practice. In my survey,I argue that the association of the bronze tripod with cooking game such as venison and boar was restricted to elite hunting groups who took their feasting equipment with them to their graves.We hope that futurework will focus on refining our understanding of the feast. Some occasions that we might 128 JAMES C. WRIGHT search for are agriculturalfeasts (planting, harvest), initiation feasts, and funeraryfeasts, and we are challenged to imagine what kinds of evidence would best demonstratethe occurrenceof these feasts and to develop methods for recovering such information. Borgna grapples with issues of social structure and organization in detail in her comparative study of Minoan and Mycenaean traditions of feasting. It is her contention that feasting, especially its material representation in pottery selection and usage, actively promotes social structure and that archaeologists, through judicious examination of the evidence, can make strong statements about a society and its transformations. By analyzing many contexts on Crete from the Early Bronze Age through the end of the Late Bronze Age, she makes a strong argument that Minoan society was corporate in structureand that more vertical and hierarchical relationships became apparent through the influence of Mycenaean culture. Feasting in Mycenaean society, she argues, was from the beginning focused on individual reciprocity among aggrandizing elites operating in competitive arenas.For this reason she believes that the customs of feasting and drinking associated with Mycenaean funerarypractice reflect an exclusive practice among kin and social peers that is different from feasting in Crete. Of particularinterest is Borgna's attention to the locales of feasting: interior and exterior, centralized and dispersed. These, she believes, can be recognized through the study of feasting contexts in settlements and in mortuaryspaces.More attention to this issue in the different culturalsettings of the Aegean and eastern Mediterraneanwould be valuable, as is demonstrated by Steel's discussion of the location of feasting debris in Cypriot contexts, in building X at Kalavasos-Ayios Dhimitrios and, especially,in the well deposits near the sanctuaryat Kouklia. Hayden'slist of the potential benefits of feasting signifies the dynamic nature of the feast. The broad spectrum of categories covered by the list illustratesthe central role that feasting has as a social activity in the formation and maintenance of societies, and thereby points to ways to explore both the evolution of a society as well as the social and cultural dynamics of the relationsof power.In the essaysthat follow, these issues arebroached in general terms. In my overview, I explore the ways in which tracing the development of feasting as a formal practice allows us to confront issues in the formation of a Mycenaean cultural identity. The observations I make are amplified by the studies of Cretan and Cypriot feasting practices by Borgna and Steel, who describe and interpret the evidence for "native" feasting practices on these islands before the advent of Mycenaean influence. The contrasts between traditionalMinoan and Cypriot practices, on the one hand, and the Mycenaean feast, on the other, are also explored. Minoan feasting expresses the horizontal, group-reinforcing structure of Minoan communities; on Cyprus a more eclectic tradition seems to develop drawing from Anatolia, the Levant, and the Aegean. The authors' identification of Mycenaean elements in Minoan and Cypriot contexts reinforces the notion that the Mycenaean feast was an exclusive custom tied to competition for status and power among elites. This last point is particularlyevident in the study of the pottery, as Borgna argues, and as Steel illustrates in her discussion of the Cypriot attention to the Mycenaean krater.The krater, as a container for wine, THE 47. See alsoIsaakidou et al.2002. 48.TzedakisandMartlew1999; McGovern et al. 1999; McGovern 2003. 49. Bendall,forthcoming. MYCENAEAN FEAST: AN INTRODUCTION 129 strongly symbolizes the importance of drinking within these elite groups. It, like the drinking cup, became an icon of the warriorsociety of the Iron Age, with its codes of honor,as examinedby Sherrattin her studyof Homeric feasting.Through these studies,the evolving and changing form of feasting appearsto be a sensitive gauge of changes in sociopolitical structure,and a useful way to think about continuity through periods of transformation, such as the postpalatial transition to the Iron Age (Late Helladic/Late Minoan IIIC through the Protogeometricperiod). In terms of Mycenaean social structure,however, there is much more to explore. None of these papers, for example, considers the role of gender in feasting. The differentiation of social groups within palace society also needs more attention, as Stocker and Davis note in their study of feasting at the Palace of Nestor.47 Furthermore,we should address questions about the organization and social divisions within such feasts, of other kinds of feasting, and of feasting not sponsored by the palace, and the methods for doing this are well within our grasp:careful documentation of context, collection of organic remains through sieving and flotation, analysis of soils, and biomolecular investigation for organic residues of comestibles.48In her contribution to the publication of the Sheffield Conference, Bendall pursues some of these issues through a spatial analysis of the areas of feasting and the varying contexts of pottery storage in different areasof the palace.49Both Borgna'sand Steel's considerations of "native"Minoan and Cypriot traditions of feasting provide a context for thinking about the feast as an expression of identity and, as Borgna emphasizes, of the structuralrelations within a society. Here again, issues of power relations and gender are relevant and may be fruitfully explored in further research. The articles in this volume, therefore, do not representa comprehensive survey of the practice of feasting in Mycenaean society or the many ways that feasting can be studied to provide insight into the society.They offer, nonetheless, powerful and richly detailed evidence from a variety of sources for Mycenaean feasting. The authors make it clear that feasting was an important activity from the beginning of Mycenaean society until its end and was fundamentally linked to the formation and maintenance of Mycenaean identity. They show how the practice of feasting evolved and, to some extent, how it differed (or how the importance of it differed) from locality to locality and region to region. Although our sources are stronglyweighted in favor of Pylos and its territory,feasting seems to have been similarly constructed and practiced at other Mycenaean palace centers as well-certainly Knossos, Mycenae, and Thebes. The contrast of Mycenaean practices with those of cultures with whom the Mycenaeans were in contact confirms the general characterof Mycenaean feasting and makes clear the way in which the manipulation of social practices is fundamentalto the formation and maintenanceof power relationswithin communities. Material culture in this sense is a sensitive and extremely rich source of information about ancient societies and the specific social practices that define their structureand identity. In closing, I wish to thank the Institute for Aegean Prehistory for providing funds to bring the participantsin the AIA colloquium to Philadelphia in 2002. I thank Tracey Cullen for inviting us to submit these 130 JAMES C. WRIGHT papers for publication in Hesperia;she has moved this project along with patience and a firm hand. She and her colleagues at the American School of Classical Studies Publications Office have brought a level of professionalism and attention to detail that uphold high standards unusual in this age, though long a tradition at Hesperia.Jeremy Rutter and Brian Hayden, the Hesperiareviewers, have held us to the highest scholarly standards:if these papers succeed in their arguments and have merit in their presentation, it is due in large part to the thoughtful and exceptionally detailed attention they paid to the manuscriptsin draft form. We are grateful to all of the above for their help in improving each offering. Finally, to all of the participants,I express my personal thanks for their joining in this undertaking and making their contributions reflect the work of the group. REFERENCES Acheson, P. 1999. "The Role of Force in the Development of Early MycenaeanPolities,"in Laffineur 1999a, pp. 97-104. Bendall,L. M. Forthcoming."Fit for a King?Hierarchy,Exclusion,Aspiration,and Desire in the Social Structureof MycenaeanBanqueting,"in Halstead and Barrett, forthcoming. Bennet,J. 2001. "Agencyand Bureaucracy:Thoughts on the Nature and Extent of Administrationin Bronze Age Pylos,"in Voutsakiand Killen 2001, pp. 25-37. Binford,L. 1981. Bones:AncientMen andModernMyths,New York. Branigan,K., ed. 1998. Cemeteryand Societyin theAegeanBronzeAge (Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1), Sheffield. . 2001. Urbanismin theAegean BronzeAge(Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology4), Sheffield. Chadwick,J. 1958. "The Mycenaean Filing System,"BICS 5, pp. 1-5. - 1987. . LinearB and Related Scripts(Readingthe Past 1), London. Clarke,M. 2001. "AkhaFeasting:An EthnoarchaeologicalPerspective," in Dietler and Hayden 2001, pp. 144-167. Comaroff,J., andJ. Comaroff.1992. Ethnographyand theHistorical Imagination,Boulder. Crossland,R. A., and A. Birchall,eds. 1974. BronzeAge Migrationsin the andLinguistic Aegean:Archaeological Problemsin GreekPrehistory,Park Ridge, N.J. Davis,J. L., andJ. Bennet. 1999. "Making Mycenaeans:Warfare,Territorial Expansion,and Representationsof the Other in the Pylian Kingdom," in Laffineur1999a, pp. 105-120. Deger-Jalkotzy,S. 1999. "Military Prowessand Social Statusin Mycenaean Greece,"in Laffineur1999a, pp. 121-131. Dietler, M., and B. Hayden, eds. 2001. Feasts:Archaeological andEthnoon Food,Politics, graphicPerspectives and Power,Washington,D.C. Giddens, A. 1984. The Constitutionof Society,Berkeley. Haigg,R., and N. Marinatos,eds. 1984. TheMinoan Thalassocracy: Mythand the InThird Reality.Proceedings of ternationalSymposium at the Swedish Institutein Athens(SkrAth40, 32), Stockholm. Hdigg,R., and G. C. Nordquist,eds. 1990. Celebrations ofDeath and Divinity in theBronzeAgeArgolid. Proceedings of the SixthInternational Symposiumat the SwedishInstituteat Athens(SkrAth40, 40), Stockholm. Halstead,P., andJ. C. Barrett,eds. Forthcoming.Food,Cuisine,and Societyin PrehistoricGreece(Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 5), Sheffield. Halstead,P., and V. Isaakidou.Forthcoming. "FaunalEvidence for Feasting:Burnt Offerings from the Palaceof Nestor at Pylos,"in Halstead and Barrett,forthcoming. THE Hamilakis,Y., and E. Konsolaki.2004. "Pigsfor the Gods: BurntAnimal Sacrificesas Embodied Ritualsat a MycenaeanSanctuary,"OJA23, pp. 135-151. Hayden, B. 2001. "FabulousFeasts: A Prolegomenonto the Importance of Feasting,"in Dietler and Hayden 2001, pp. 23-64. Hiller, S. 1999. "Scenesof Warfareand Combat in the Arts of Aegean Late Bronze Age: Reflectionson Typology and Development,"in Laffineur 1999a, pp. 319-330. Hodder,I. 1991. ReadingthePast. CurrentApproaches to Interpretationin New York. Archaeology, Isaakidou,V., P. Halstead,J. Davis, and S. Stocker.2002. "BurntAnimal Sacrificein Late Bronze Age Greece:New Evidence from the Mycenaean'Palaceof Nestor,' Pylos,"Antiquity76, pp. 86-92. Killen,J. T. 1992. "Observationson the Thebes Sealings,"in Mykenaika. ActesduIXe Colloqueinternational surlestextesmycinienset egeens organisiparle Centrede l'antiquitM grecqueet romainede la Fondation desrecherches et helldnique scientifiques d'Ath~nes (BCH l'Ecolefranaise Suppl.25), ed. J.-P. Olivier,Paris, pp. 365-380. 1.1994. "ThebesSealings,Knossos Tablets,and MycenaeanState Banquets,"BICS 39, pp. 67-84. 1998. "The Pylos Ta Tab--. lets Revisited,"pp. 421-422, in F. Rougemont andJ.-P. Olivier,eds., "Recherchesrecentesen 6pigraphie cr'to-myc nienne,"BCH 122, pp. 403-443. Kontorli-Papadopoulou,L. 1999. "FrescoFighting-Scenes as Evidence for WarlikeActivities in the LBA Aegean,"in Laffineur1999a, pp. 331-339. Laffineur,R., ed. 1987. Thanatos.Les en Egie a l'dgedu coutumesfundraires Bronze.Actesdu ColloguedeLidge (Aegaeum1), Liege. . 1999a. Polemos:Le contexte guerrieren Egie a l'dgedu Bronze. Actesde la 7eRencontre interJggenne national,Universitede Lidge(Aegaeum19), Liege. . 1999b. "De Mychnes g Hombre:R~flexionssur l'iconographie MYCENAEAN FEAST: AN INTRODUCTION guerribremycenienne,"in Laffineur 1999a, pp. 313-317. Laffineur,R., and R. Higg, eds. 2001. Potnia:DeitiesandReligionin the of the AegeanBronzeAge.Proceedings 8th InternationalAegean Conference, Giteborg(Aegaeum22), Liege. Laffineur,R., andW.-D. Niemeier, eds. 1995. Politeia:Societyand State in theAegeanBronzeAge.Proceedings of the5th InternationalAegeanConference,Heidelberg(Aegaeum12), Liege. Leach, E. 1977. "AView from the andAnthroBridge,"in Archaeology Interest Areas ofMutual pology: (BAR Suppl. 19), ed. M. Spriggs, Oxford,pp. 161-176. Lissarrague,F. 1990. TheAesthetics of the GreekBanquet:Imagesof Wine and Ritual, trans.A. SzegedyMaszak, Princeton. McGovern, P. E. 2003. AncientWine: TheSearch for the Originsof Viticulture,Princeton. McGovern, P. E., D. L. Glusker, R. A. Moreau,A. Nufiez, C. W. Beck, E. Simpson, E. D. Butrym, L. J. Exner,and E. C. Stout. 1999. "AFeast Fit for King Midas," Nature402, pp. 863-864. Murray,O., ed. 1990. Sympotica:A on theSymposion, Symposium Oxford. O'Connor,T. P. 1998. "On the Difficulty of Detecting SeasonalSlaughterings of Sheep,"Environmental 3, pp. 5-11. Archaeology 1967. Lesscribesde Cnossos: Olivier,J.-P. desarchivesd'un Essai de classement palais mycinien(Incunabulagraeca 17), Rome. Orme, B. 1981. AnthropologyforArchaeologists:AnIntroduction,London. Palaima,T. G. 1984. "ScribalOrganization and PalatialActivity,"in Shelmerdineand Palaima1984, pp. 31-39. . 1987. "MycenaeanSeals and Sealings in Their Economic and AdministrativeContexts,"in TractataMycenaea.Proceedings ofthe EighthInternationalColloquiumon MycenaeanStudies,Ohrid,ed. P. H. Ilievski and L. Crepajac,Skopje, pp. 249-266. -. 1988. TheScribesofPylos(Incunabulagraeca87), Rome. I3I . 1990. "Origin,Development, Transition,andTransformation: The PurposesandTechniquesof Administrationin Minoan and MycenaeanSociety,"in AegeanSeals, Sealings,andAdministration.Proceedingsof theNEH-DicksonConference,Austin (Aegaeum5), ed. T. G. Palaima,Liege, pp. 83-104. 1996. "Sealingsas Links in an .. AdministrativeChain,"in Administrationin AncientSocieties.Proceedingsof Session218 of the13th InternationalCongressofAnthropological Mexico and EthnologicalSciences, ed. P. E. and Fiandra, Ferioli, City, G. G. Fissore,Turin,pp. 37-66. 2000a. "TransactionalVocab.. ularyin LinearB Tablet and Sealing Administration,"in Administrative Documentsin theAegeanand Their NearEasternCounterparts, ed. M. Perna,Turin,pp. 261-276. 1.2000b. "The Palaeographyof MycenaeanInscribedSealingsfrom Thebes and Pylos:Their Place within the MycenaeanAdministrative System andTheir Links with the Extra-PalatialSphere,"in Minoisch-mykenische Glyptik:Stil, VInternaFunktion. Ikonographie, tionalesSiegel-Symposium, Marburg (CMS Beiheft 6), ed. W. Miiller, Berlin,pp. 219-238. Pappa,M., P. Halstead,K. Kotsakis, and D. Urem-Kotsou.Forthcoming. "Evidencefor Large-ScaleFeasting at Late Neolithic Makriyalos, N. Greece,"in Halstead and Barrett, forthcoming. Patrik,L. 1985. "IsThere an Archaeological Record?"in Advancesin ArMethodand Theory8, chaeological ed. M. Schiffer,Orlando,pp. 27-62. Pauketat,T. R., L. S. Kelly,G. F. Fritz, N. H. Lopinot, S. Elias, and E. Hargrave.2002. "The Residues of Feastingand Public Ritual at Early Cahokia,"AmerAnt67, pp. 257-279. Perodie,J. R. 2001. "Feastingfor Prosperity:A Study of Southern Northwest Coast Feasting,"in Dietler and Hayden 2001, pp. 185214. Piteros, C., J.-P. Olivier,andJ. L. Melena. 1990. "Lesinscriptionsen lindaireB des nodules de Thebes •- 132 JAMES (1982):La fouille,les documents, les possibilitds d'interpretation," BCH114,pp.103-184. D. 2001."Feasting Schmandt-Besserat, in theAncientNearEast,"in DietlerandHayden2001,pp.391403. Shanks,M., andC. Tilley.1987.Reand constructing Archaeology: Theory Practice, Cambridge. C. W., andT. G. Palaima, Shelmerdine, eds.1984.PylosComesAlive: Indus- try andAdministrationin a MycenaeanPalace.Papersof a Symposium, New York. Speth,J. D. 1983. BisonKillsandBone Counts:DecisionMakingbyAncient Hunters,Chicago. Tzedakis,Y., and H. Martlew,eds. 1999. MinoansandMycenaeans: Flavoursof TheirTime,Athens. Ventris,M., andJ. Chadwick.1973. Documentsin MycenaeanGreek, 2nd ed., Cambridge. JamesC. Wright BRYN MAWR COLLEGE DEPARTMENT NEAR BRYN OF CLASSICAL EASTERN MAWR, [email protected] AND ARCHAEOLOGY PENNSYLVANIA C. WRIGHT 19010-2899 Voutsaki,S., andJ. Killen, eds. 2001. Economyand Politicsin theMycenaeanPalaceStates(Cambridge Philological Society,Suppl.27), Cambridge. Wright,J. C. 1994. "The SpatialConfigurationof Belief:The Archaeology of MycenaeanReligion,"in Placingthe Gods:Sanctuariesand SacredSpacein AncientGreece, ed. S. E. Alcock and R. Osborne, Oxford, pp. 37-78.
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz